Mercurial > hg
changeset 8729:f67e5aac4e9e
hgignore.5: wrap lines at 70 chars (whitespace cleanup)
author | Martin Geisler <mg@lazybytes.net> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 08 Jun 2009 00:13:58 +0200 |
parents | 9d67706ee8d5 |
children | 01f0ddb90342 |
files | doc/hgignore.5.txt |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 7 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/doc/hgignore.5.txt Mon Jun 08 00:13:35 2009 +0200 +++ b/doc/hgignore.5.txt Mon Jun 08 00:13:58 2009 +0200 @@ -18,9 +18,8 @@ Mercurial ignores every unmanaged file that matches any pattern in an ignore file. The patterns in an ignore file do not apply to files -managed by Mercurial. To control Mercurial's handling of files that -it manages, see the hg(1) man page. Look for the "-I" and "-X" -options. +managed by Mercurial. To control Mercurial's handling of files that it +manages, see the hg(1) man page. Look for the "-I" and "-X" options. In addition, a Mercurial configuration file can point to a set of per-user or global ignore files. See the hgrc(5) man page for details @@ -31,9 +30,9 @@ ------ An ignore file is a plain text file consisting of a list of patterns, -with one pattern per line. Empty lines are skipped. The "#" -character is treated as a comment character, and the "\" character is -treated as an escape character. +with one pattern per line. Empty lines are skipped. The "#" character +is treated as a comment character, and the "\" character is treated as +an escape character. Mercurial supports several pattern syntaxes. The default syntax used is Python/Perl-style regular expressions. @@ -54,8 +53,8 @@ Neither glob nor regexp patterns are rooted. A glob-syntax pattern of the form "*.c" will match a file ending in ".c" in any directory, and -a regexp pattern of the form "\.c$" will do the same. To root a -regexp pattern, start it with "^". +a regexp pattern of the form "\.c$" will do the same. To root a regexp +pattern, start it with "^". EXAMPLE -------